Douglas Fitzgerald Dowd (December 7, 1919 – September 8, 2017)[1][2] was an American political economist, economic historian and political activist.
Douglas Fitzgerald Dowd | |
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Personal details | |
Born | San Francisco, California, U.S. | December 7, 1919
Died | September 8, 2017 Bologna, Italy | (aged 97)
From the late 1940s to the late 1990s, Dowd taught at Cornell University, the University of California, Berkeley and other universities. He has authored books that criticize capitalism in general, and US capitalism in particular.
He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in the field of economic history for the academic year 1959–1960.[3]
Many of his writings and audio transcripts are available on his website.[4]
Dowd was the son of a Jewish mother and a Catholic father. The strong dislike for each side of the family for the other side led him during his youth to embrace an antireligious attitude.[5]
Dowd claimed to be "non-religious" without saying if he was an agnostic or atheist.
Dowd was one of the nominees of the Peace and Freedom Party for Vice President in the 1968 US presidential election. He agreed to be on the ticket in New York in order to prevent the selection of Jerry Rubin.[6] The party's presidential candidate that year was Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver, who finished a distant fifth in the election.
Dowd was a sponsor of the War Tax Resistance project, which practiced and advocated tax resistance as a form of protest against the Vietnam War.[7]
Dowd was the faculty sponsor of the West Tennessee Voters Project in Fayette County, Tennessee, that inspired a sizable number of Cornell students to become more active in civil rights work in the South one year after the gruesome murder of Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner and James Chaney in Philadelphia, Mississippi.